Release CalendarTop 250 MoviesMost Popular MoviesBrowse Movies by GenreTop Box OfficeShowtimes & TicketsMovie NewsIndia Movie Spotlight
    What's on TV & StreamingTop 250 TV ShowsMost Popular TV ShowsBrowse TV Shows by GenreTV News
    What to WatchLatest TrailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsCannes Film FestivalStar WarsAsian Pacific American Heritage MonthSummer Watch GuideSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll Events
    Born TodayMost Popular CelebsCelebrity News
    Help CenterContributor ZonePolls
For Industry Professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign In
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app

howard.schumann

Joined Nov 1999

Top 185
Last Revised 08/20/19

1. Apu Trilogy, India, 1955-59, Satyajit Ray
2. Au hasard Balthazar, France, 1966, Robert Bresson
3. Diary of a Country Priest, France, 1950, Robert Bresson
4. Ordet, Denmark, 1955, Carl Dreyer
5. Leolo, Canada, 1992, Jean-Claude Lauzon
6. Fateless, Hungary, 2005, Lajos Koltai
7. Gospel According to St. Matthew, Italy, 1964, Pier Paolo Pasolini
8. My Dinner with Andre, US, 1981, Louis Malle
9. The Great Adventure, Sweden, 1953, Arne Sucksdorff
10, Hiroshima Mon Amour, France, 1959, Alain Resnais
11. The Quince Tree Sun, Spain, 1992, Victor Erice
12. Searching for Bobby Fischer, US, 1993, Steven Zaillian
13. Wings of Desire, Germany, 1987, Wim Wenders
14. Broken Wings, Israel, 2002, Nir Bergman
15. Promises, US, 2001, B.Z. Goldberg
16. Smoke, US, 1995, Wayne Wang
17. I’m Not Scared, Italy, 2003, Gabriele Salvatores
18. Forbidden Games, France, 1952, Rene Clement
19. Unbearable Lightness of Being, US, 1988, Philip Kaufman
20. All About Lily Chou Chou, Japan, 2001, Shunji Iwai
21. A Place in the World (Un Lugar en el Mundo), Argentina, 1992, Adolfo Aristarain
22. Ordinary People, US, 1980, Robert Redford
23. La Promesse, Belgium, 1996, Jean & Luc Dardenne
24. Lamerica, Italy, 1994, Gianni Amelio
25. Stolen Children, Italy, 1992, Gianni Amelio
26. Therese, France, 1986, Alain Cavalier
27. The Man in the Moon, US, 1991, Robert Mulligan
28. Wild Reeds, France, 1994, Andre Techine
29. Scrooge (A Christmas Carol), UK, 1951, Brian Desmond Hurst
30. O Lucky Man, UK, 1973, Lindsay Anderson
31. Running on Empty, US, 1988, Sidney Lumet
32. Tokyo Story, Japan, 1953, Yasujiro Ozu
33. Boot Polish, India, 1954, Prakash Arora (Raj Kapoor)
34. Pixote, Brazil, 1981, Hector Babenco
35. The Search, US, 1948, Fred Zinneman
36. Ikiru, Japan, 1952, Akira Kurosawa
37. Black Orpheus, Brazil, 1959, Marcel Camus
38. The Red Balloon, France, 1956, Albert LaMorisse
39. Grand Canyon, US, 1991, Lawrence Kasdan
40. The Dreamlife of Angels, France, 1998, Eric Zonca
41. Z, France, 1969, Con. Costas-Garvas
42. Kes, UK, 1969, Ken Loach
43. Nobody’s Fool, US, 1994, Robert Benton
44. A Man Escaped, France, 1956, Robert Bresson
45. Dad (Oca), Slovenia, 2010, Vlado Skafar
46. The Cup (Phorpa), Bhutan, 1999, Khyentse Norbu
47. The Son (Le Fils), France, 2002, Jean & Luc Dardenne
48. Lean on Pete, U.K., 2017, Andrew Haigh
49. Phoenix, Germany, 2014, Christian Petzold
50. Hero, US, 1992, Stephen Frears
51. Bus 174, Brazil, 2002, Jose Padhilla and Felipe Lacerda
52. Good Will Hunting, US, 1997, Gus Van Sant
53. Resurrection, US, 1980, Nicholas Petrie
54. Love Letter, Japan, 1995, Shunji Iwai
55. The Place Beyond the Pines, U.S., 2012, Derek Cianfrance
56. Daniel, US, 1983, Sidney Lumet
57. Vertical Ray of the Sun, Vietnam, 2000, Tran Anh Hung
58. Columbus, U.S., 2017, Kogonada
59. Barbara, Germany, 2012, Christian Petzold
60. A Bronx Tale, US, 1993, Robert De Niro
61. The Natural, US, 1984, Barry Levinson
62. Ram Dass, Fierce Grace, US, 2001, Mickey Lemle
63. The Lives of Others, Germany, 2006, Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
64. The Passenger, Italy, 1975, Michaelangelo Antonioni
65. Milagro Beanfield War, US, 1988, Robert Redford
66. Tricks (Stzucki), Poland, 2007, Andrzej Jakimowski
67. Deep Breath (Le Soufflé), France, 2001, Damian O'Doul
68. The American President, US, 1995, Rob Reiner
69. JFK, US, 1991, Oliver Stone
70. Dave, US, 1993, Ivan Reitman
71. Field of Dreams, US, 1989, Phil Robinson
72. Taste of Cherry, Iran, 1997, Abbas Kiarostami
73. The Wild Child, France, 1969, Francois Truffaut
74. Good Men, Good Women, Taiwan, 1995, Hou Hsiao-hsien
75. Chunhyang, South Korea, 2000, Kwon-Taek Im
76. Keys to the House, Italy, 2004, Gianni Amelio
77. Close-Up, Iran, 1990, Abbas Kiarostami
78. Deep End, U.K., Germany, 1970, Jerzy Skolimowski
79. Intimate Grammar, Israel, 2010, Nir Bergman
80. Medium Cool, US, 1969, Haskell Wexler
81. Woman in the Dunes, Japan, 1964, H. Teshigahara
82. Raise the Red Lantern, China, 1991, Zhang Yimou
83. My Name is Ivan (Ivan’s Childhood), Russia, 1962, Andrei Tarkovsky
84. Dead Man, US, 1995, Jim Jarmusch
85. Umberto D, Italy, 1952, Vittorio de Sica
86. The Tree of Life, US, 2011, Terence Malick
87. Mon Oncle Antoine, Canada, 1971, Claude Jutra
88. How Green Was My Valley, US, 1941, John Ford
89. Days of Heaven, US, 1978, Terrence Malick
90. The Warriors, US, 1979, Walter Hill
91. Cyclo, Vietnam, 1995, Tran Anh Hung
92. La Jetee, France, 1962, Chris Marker
93. Devi, India, 1960, Satyajit Ray
94. The Weavers: Wasn’t That a Time? US, 1982, Jim Brown II
95. Matewan, US, 1987, John Sayles
96. Three Colors Trilogy, France, 1993-4, Kristov Kieslowski
97. A Girl and a Tree, Slovenia, 2012, Vlado Skafar
98. The Wind Will Carry Us, Iran, 1999, Abbas Kiarostami
99. The River, France, US, India, 1951, Jean Renoir
100. L’enfant, France, 2005, Jean and Luc Dardenne
101. Rocket Science, US, 2007, Jeffrey Blitz
102. E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, US, 1982, Steven Spielberg
103. Malcolm X, US, 1992, Spike Lee
104. East of Eden, US, 1955, Elia Kazan
105. Munyurangabo, Rwanda. U.S., 2007, Lee Isaac Chung
106. Sweet Sixteen, UK, 2002, Ken Loach
107. Letter to a Child, Slovenia, 2009, Vlado Skafar
108. The Long Day Closes, UK, 1992, Terence Davies
109. He Who Must Die, France , 1957, Jules Dassin
110. La Vie de Jesus, France, 1997, Bruno Dumont
111. Wonder Boys, US, 2000, Curtis Hanson
112. Hoosiers, US, 1986, David Anspaugh
113. L’Humanite, France, 1999, Bruno Dumont
114. It All Starts Today, France, 1999, Bernard Tavernier
115. Local Hero, UK, 1983, William Forsyth
116. My Father's Glory/My Mother's Castle, France, 1990, Robert Yves
117. Wild Strawberries, Sweden, 1957, Ingmar Bergman
118. Viridiana, Spain, 1961, Luis Bunuel
119. Hud, US, 1963, Martin Ritt
120. The Jolson Story, US, 1946, Alfred Green
121. A Taste of Honey, UK, 1961, Tony Richardson
122. Where is the Friends Home, Iran 1987, Abbas Kiarostami
123. In This World, UK, 2002, Michael Winterbottom
124. Flowers of Shanghai, Taiwan, 1998, Hou Hsiao-Hsien
125. Tropical Malady, Thailand, 2004, Apichatpong Weerasethakul
126. Color of Paradise, Iran, 1999, Majid Majidi
127. All the Presidents Men, US, 1976, Alan J. Pakula
128. Nine Lives, US, 2005, Rodrigo Garcia
129. Vanya on 42nd Street, US 1994 Louis Malle
130. The Magic Flute, Sweden, 1975, Ingmar Bergman
131. Through The Olive Trees, Iran, 1994, Abbas Kiarostami
132. Moonlight Whispers, Japan, 1999, Yakihiko Shiota
133. Beijing Bicycle, China, 2001, Wang Xiaoshuia
134. A Midnight Clear, US, 1992, Keith Gordon
135. Two-Lane Blacktop, US, 1971, Monte Hellman
136. Beau Travail, France, 1999, Claire Denis
137. The New World, US, 2005, Terrence Malick
138. The Fugitive, U.S., 1993, Andrew Davis
139. The Green Ray, France, 1985, Erich Rohmer
140. Back to the Future, US, 1985, Robert Zemeckis
141. Home Before Dark, US, 1958, Mervyn LeRoy
142. Sundays and Cybele, France, 1962, Serge Bourgignon
143. Moonstruck, US, 1987, Norman Jewison
144. The White Diamond, Germany, 2004, Werner Herzog
145. Blow-Up, UK, 1966, Michaelangelo Antonioni
146. I’m Going Home, France 2001, Manoel de Olivera
147. Son of the Bride, Argentina, 2001, Juan Jose Campanella
149. Sleeping Giant, Canada, 2015, Andrew Cividino
150. L’Enfance Nue (Naked Childhood), France, 1968, Maurice Pialat
151. Charly, France, 2007, Isild Le Besco
152. The Journey, US, 1959, Anatole Litvak
153. Quiz Show, US, 1994, Robert Redford
154. One Summer of Happiness, Sweden, 1951, Arne Mattson
155. Smiles of a Summer Night, Sweden, 1955, Ingmar Bergman
156. The Romance of Astrea and Celadon, France, 2007, Eric Rohmer
157. A Midsummer Night’s Dream, UK, 1968, Peter Hall
158. Fireworks (Hana-Bi), Japan, 1997, Takeshi Kitano
159. Don't Die Without Telling Me Where You're Going, Argentina, 1995, Eliseo Subiela
160. Butterfly, Spain, 1999, Jose Luis Cuerda
161. Elephant, U.S., 2003, Gus Van Sant
162. Blissfully Yours, Thailand, 2002, Apichatpong Weerasethakul
163. No Direction Home: Bob Dylan, U.S., 2006, Martin Scorcese
164. Twelfth Night, US, 1996, Trevor Nunn
165. Groundhog Day, U.S., 1993, Harold Ramis
166. Stand Clear of the Closing Doors, U.S., 2013, Sam Fleischner
167. Shane, U.S., 1953, George Stevens
168. Capernaum, Lebanon, 2018, Nadine Labaki
169. Kramer vs. Kramer, U.S, 1979, Robert Benton
170. Meet Joe Black, U.S., 1998, Martin Brest
171. Life on a String, China, 1991, Chen Kaige
172. Miracle on 34th Street, U.S., 1947, George Seaton
173. The Turning Point, U.S., 1977, Herbert Ross
174. Grapes of Wrath, U.S., 1940, John Ford
175. Sleepless in Seattle, U.S., 1993, Nora Ephron
176. Ballad of a Soldier, Russia, 1959, Grigory Chukhraj
177. In Between Days, U.S., 2006, So Yong Kim
178. Linda, Linda, Linda, Japan, 2005, Nobuhiro Yamashita
179. Point of Order, U.S., 1964, Emile de Antonio
180. In the City of Sylvia, France, 2007, Jose Luis Guerin
181. Couch in New York, US, 1996, Chantal Akerman
182. The Way Home (Jibeuro), South Korea, 2002, Jeong-hyang Lee
183. Living is Easy with Eyes Closed, Spain, 2013, David Trueba
184. The Kid with a Bike, France, 2011, Jean & Luc Dardenne
185. Hachi: A Dog’s Tale, U.K., U.S., 2009, Lasse Halstrom


Welcome to the new profile
We're still working on updating some profile features. To see the badges, ratings breakdowns, and polls for this profile, please go to the previous version.

Ratings1.1K

howard.schumann's rating
Playground
7.39
Playground
Happening
7.49
Happening
Miguel
9.59
Miguel
The Rescue
8.39
The Rescue
C'mon C'mon
7.37
C'mon C'mon
The Worst Person in the World
7.710
The Worst Person in the World
Sun Children
7.18
Sun Children
Benediction
6.63
Benediction
Words on Bathroom Walls
7.29
Words on Bathroom Walls
Beautiful Something Left Behind
7.59
Beautiful Something Left Behind
Time
6.89
Time
Another Round
7.77
Another Round
1982
6.79
1982
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
6.99
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
On the Rocks
6.49
On the Rocks
Never Rarely Sometimes Always
7.410
Never Rarely Sometimes Always
Here We Are
7.19
Here We Are
The Trial of the Chicago 7
7.77
The Trial of the Chicago 7
Undine
6.69
Undine
Fatima
6.68
Fatima
First Cow
7.110
First Cow
I Lost My Body
7.59
I Lost My Body
Portrait of a Lady on Fire
8.110
Portrait of a Lady on Fire
Honeyland
8.09
Honeyland
American Factory
7.48
American Factory

Reviews1.3K

howard.schumann's rating
Playground

Playground

7.3
9
  • Sep 6, 2022
  • Haunting and lyrical

    Happening

    Happening

    7.4
    9
  • Sep 6, 2022
  • Tense, engaging, and realistic

    "Life's greatest happiness is to be convinced we are loved" - Victor Hugo

    Winner of the Golden Lion Award at the 2021 Venice Film Festival, Audrey Diwan's ("Losing It") harrowing abortion drama Happening takes place in rural France during the 1960s, a decade before abortion was legalized in France. Based on the memoir by Annie Erma ("Les Années Super-8"), the film is a gripping and, at times, uncomfortable reminder of the inherent physical and emotional dangers of illegal, "back-alley" abortions, procedures that pose a danger to the unborn child as well as to the health of the mother. Co-written by Marcia Romano ("Peaceful") and brought to life by the naturalistic cinematography of Laurent Tangy ("Mascarade"), the film dramatizes a young woman's painful quest to terminate her unwanted pregnancy.

    In a perfectly realized performance by Anamaria Vartolomei ("How to Be a Good Wife"), Anne Duchesne is an ambitious literature student in her early twenties with aspirations to become a writer. She lives at a school dorm with her best friends Hélène (Luàna Bajrami, "Portrait of a Lady on Fire") and Brigitte (Louise Orry-Diquéro, "Occidental"), independent from her parents, Jacques and Gabrielle (Eric Verdin, "Faithful" and Sandrine Bonnaire, "Into the World"). While immersed in her studies to gain admittance to a top university, Anne discovers that she is pregnant, a situation that will threaten her continued education.

    Diwan is unsparing in her depiction of the physical and emotional trauma a young girl had to go through to have an abortion, allowing us to see the graphic details that make Happening essential viewing for those confronting the Supreme Court decision to terminate Roe v Wade, the ruling that has protected abortion seekers and providers for the last fifty years in the United States. Until the moment of discovery, Anne is hard to distinguish from her immature roommates who spend their days studying and their nights looking for adventures at the local clubs.

    Here, women who interface too much with boys are called "loose" or "sluts," and their sexual encounters consist of acting out of fantasies within their own dorm. When her roommates discover that Anne is pregnant, the temperature in their room plummets to zero, and Anne finds only grudging support from her "best friend" Brigitte, who tells her coldly that "it's not our business." While Diwan shows us the humiliation that Anne must endure, we learn very little of her history or her background and neither do we learn much about the young man who impregnated her.

    Aware of the possibility of jail for the patient and the medical practitioner, a doctor she has trusted (Fabrizio Rongione, "The Unknown Girl") in the past tells her that she has to keep the child, reminding her that she cannot even discuss the matter with him. In addition, Jean (Kacey Mottet Klein, "Being 17"), a male friend, turns Anne's plea for help into a sexual proposition asking "why not?" since she no longer has any risk of becoming pregnant. Ultimately, Anne finds a surreptitious practitioner, Madame Rivière (Anna Mouglalis, "The Salamander") but that is only the beginning of her sorrows.

    Yet, for all of its disturbing images, in telling this "horror" story, Diwan avoids melodrama, offering a tense, engaging, and realistic picture of what the world was like for a young woman who is carrying an unwanted child and what it could be again unless our collective voices are heard. Like events shown in Ursula Meier's brilliant 2012 film "Sister," life for an unwanted child may not be better than no life at all. Meier makes it evident that growing up in a world without love, even the most skillful and resilient child cannot fill the gaping hole it leaves.
    The Worst Person in the World

    The Worst Person in the World

    7.7
    10
  • Mar 29, 2022
  • A flower that blooms

    To exist is to change, to change is to mature, to mature is to go on creating oneself endlessly" - Henri Bergson

    Some people experience maturity at an early age when they are thrust by circumstances into a position of responsibility before they are ready. Some do not experience it until their twenties, thirties, or even forties. Others never do. In a society where maturity is defined by what you do for a living, who you are with, and whether or not you are emotionally and/or financially independent, lacking these attributes can lead to serious doubts of self worth. Brilliantly performed by Renate Reinsve ("Welcome to Norway"), winner of the Best Actress Award at the Cannes Film Festival, Joachim Trier's ("Oslo, August 31st") masterful The Worst Person in the World tells the story of four years in the life of Julie, a young woman feeling adrift without concrete goals or relationships who, like Frances Ha in Noah Baumbach's comedy of the same name, must confront the idea that she is floundering and lacking direction in life.

    Written by Eskil Vogt ("The Innocents") and nominated for Academy awards for Best Original Screenplay and Best International Film, the film is divided into 12 chapters with a prologue and epilogue thrown in. The Worst Person in the World does not contain any very, very bad people. The title, according to the director, derives from the idea that many young people in Norway conclude that if they fail at one thing or another, they are then "the worst person in the world." Trier says, "It's a Norwegian term." It's also self-deprecating. "Oh. I failed. I'm the worst person in the world." It's that feeling of misery and personal failure - in love, for example." "When was life supposed to start?" asks the narrator on Julie's behalf.

    Drifting between a desire to become a medical doctor, a psychologist, a photographer, and a writer, on turning 30, Julie is certain about one thing. She does not want children until she is ready, especially to her way of thinking, not when she has so much unfilled potential. She is holding out for an undefined, perhaps illusory time when suddenly everything will come together. The issue crystallizes when she meets and falls in love with Aksel (Anders Danielsen Lie, "Bergman Island"), a graphic novelist whose cartoon creature "Bobcat" is modeled after a big Nordic cat. He is a man ten years her senior who feels that time for him is fleeting and he wants to raise a family but feels blocked by Julie's refusal.

    After crashing a party, Julie meets Eivind (Herbert Nordrum, "Amundsen"), a young, modern thinking, and relatively unambitious counter man at a coffee shop. He is a man of simple pleasures, very much unlike Aksel who does not make too many demands on her. Both married, in a chapter, ironically labeled "Cheating," they decide not to cheat on each other's partners, but it takes a more subtle, tongue-in-cheek turn. Julie asks him, "I don't want to be unfaithful; we both have partners, but are we allowed to do something, on the edge, that's considered not unfaithful?" We can figure out the answer.

    After being together for a few years, Julie tells Aksel in a powerful sequence that she wants to separate, expressing her desire to move beyond needing acceptance to find a degree of self-realization. In one of the best scenes, the world freezes in space and time as Julie runs through the city looking to find Eivind after she leaves Aksel pouring her a cup of coffee. Filled with animated sequences, a psychedelic mushroom trip, and a peeing contest, the film does not fit our pictures about what a romantic comedy should look like. Trier said, "For a long time I have wanted to make a film about love. One that goes a bit deeper than normal onscreen love stories, where everything is so simple, the stories so clear-cut, the feelings so admirably unambiguous."

    "The film," he continues, "doesn't dwell on hackneyed debates over the perils of living online, but it does ache for simple, tangible pleasures: The heat of touch and spontaneous human connection, and the luxury of stillness." Backed by a wide-ranging eclectic soundtrack that runs the gamut from Cobra Man, the Ahmad Jamal Trio, and Caribou to Billie Holiday, Harry Nilsson, and Art Garfunkel, The Worst Person in the World may be the worst film title in the world, but it is a work of warmth and freshness that thwarts our expectations at every turn, recreating the best of the genre, yet is also a film that has space for the pain of loss and regret. In its engaging way, the film tells us that who we really are is not about what we do or what we have but about our spiritual nature, the richness of character, and the ability to give and receive love.

    As Art Garfunkel sings Jobim's "Waters of March" during the final credits, Julie discovers that who you are is: "A flower that blooms, A fox in the brush, A knot in the wood, The song of a thrush, The mystery of life, The steps in the hall, The sound of the wind, And the waterfall, It's the moon floating free, It's the curve of the slope, It's an ant, it's a be, It's a reason for hope, and the riverbank sings, Of the waters of march, It's the promise of spring, It's the joy in your heart."
    See all reviews

    Recently viewed

    Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
    Get the IMDb app
    Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
    Follow IMDb on social
    Get the IMDb app
    For Android and iOS
    Get the IMDb app
    • Help
    • Site Index
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • License IMDb Data
    • Press Room
    • Advertising
    • Jobs
    • Conditions of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, an Amazon company

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.